A small wrapper built on the shoulders of giants to make working with the v8-inspector dead simple.
Node added support for v8-inspector in v6.3.0 but launching the debugger for a given process is still a little clumsy. inspect-process solves the following problems:
- Opening and refreshing devtools - A new instance is launched each time a process is launched.
- Unable to debug executables - Looks up path to executables such as mocha, grunt, by looking in PATH prior to resolving as a file.
- 'Unable to open devtools socket: address already in use' - Finds an open port prior to starting the inspector. Begins searching for available ports starting at the node default inspector port,
9229
. - Requiring
debug-brk
- Bypasses the user requirement of setting this flag by ensuring devtools is connected prior to advancing. Just set your debug break points, andinspect-process
will be able to pick it up.
Behind the scenes inspect-process attempts to normalize your experience by:
- Hiding the noisy output broadcast by the default
--inspect
flag. You don't need to worry about attaching,detaching, and cleaning up. Just inspect. - Automatically forcing color output; plays nicely with any module utilzing
supports-color
.
inpsect-process is only a small wrapper around the native --inspect
functionaltiy provided by node. The key differences between utilizing --inspect
and node-inspector
can be found in this comment by pavelfeldman
Install this globally and you'll have access to the inspect
command anywhere on your system.
npm install -g inspect-process
Inspecting a file
$ inspect index.js
Inspecting an executable
$ inspect grunt
Passing arguments to process
Just pass your arguments after the process.
inspect index.js --argument=val
Passing arguments to node
If you wish to pass additional arguments to the node process you will have to use the special option --
to delimit the end of the node arguments.
inspect --harmony -- index.js
Install Dependencies
npm install
Run
npm test
Inspecting a child process is not currently possible (and most likely never will be). Unfortunately inspect-process can not force child processes to spawn with the necessary --inspect
flag.
This is clear when looking at all of the provided mocha examples. The actual mocha
executable is a wrapper that spawns _mocha
(done in order to allow passing flags to the node process). In order to use mocha with inspect-process, we have to bypass that first indirection and use the _mocha
exectuable directly: inspect _mocha
.
If you have control of the source code responsible for spawning the child process, it is technically possible to still utilize inspect-process by working with programatic api, however this is not recommended for most use cases.
The MIT License (MIT) Copyright (c) 2016 Jarid Margolin
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